Elements of South-Indian Palaeography, from the Fourth to the Seventeenth Century, AD
Being an Introduction to the Study of South-Indian Inscriptions and Mss
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Published:2nd Aug '12
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
This groundbreaking and extensive 1874 study of the Sanskrit manuscripts of southern India is still cited by scholars today.
This 1874 monograph on the palaeography of southern India was the first to be published on the subject. Groundbreaking in its contribution to the history of writing in the region, and replete with manuscript plates and explanations, this work remains a much-cited resource for scholars in this field.Published in 1874, this groundbreaking monograph on the palaeography of southern India gained great scholarly acclaim. Arthur Coke Burnell (1840–82) served in the Indian Civil Service and as a judge, also building up a large collection of original or copied Sanskrit manuscripts. Originally intended as an introduction to his vast and pioneering Classified Index to the Sanskrit Manuscripts in the Palace at Tanjore (1880), this work won Burnell an honorary doctorate at the University of Strasbourg. Replete with documentary evidence, it contains copies and explanations of numerous texts, the decipherment of which threw new light upon an obscure chapter in the history of writing, offering new theories for dating the introduction of writing into India and the origin of southern Indian alphabets and numerals. Although Burnell's work has since been built on and sometimes superseded, this is still a much-cited resource in South Asian palaeography and epigraphy.
ISBN: 9781108046107
Dimensions: 297mm x 210mm x 10mm
Weight: 480g
192 pages